Policy
- To encourage discussion, we will normally take some time before answering a posted question. Nevertheless, we will acknowledge correctness of answers posted by fellow students.
- Read previous questions and answers before you post. We will ignore questions appearing more than once.
- A question relevant for the entire course is more likely to get an answer when posted in the forum rather than when sent to us by email. Especially a day before the exam.
- Keep the forum tidy by using threads wisely:
- Refrain from posting an unrelated question in an open thread,
- Refrain from starting a new thread when you have a follow-up question (to someone else's question or to yours),
- Refrain from replying yourself; use the Edit button to edit your post if you had a typo or simply forgot to say something.
Tips and tricks
Writing in Hebrew
If you write in Hebrew, you should wrap your text with a right-to-left div to give it the right direction.
To do this, simply write [[div style="direction:rtl;"]] before the text and [[/div]] after (each on a separate line!).
This is especially important if you mix Hebrew and English, as the following example shows.
Without a div | With a div |
יהי G גרף לא מכוון בעל n צמתים ו-m קשתות. |
יהי G גרף לא מכוון בעל n צמתים ו-m קשתות. |
Using mathematical notations
If you want to include math in your post, and know some TeX, you can use it in your posts. This may not be necessary just to write x2, but can make your text more readable when you want to state that $p: s\leadsto t$ or compute
(1)To use inline TeX, write it between [[$ and $]] (e.g., [[$\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}$]] gives $\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}$).
To use an equation on a whole line, write it between [[math]] and [[/math]].